Description
Doc Rivers transforms lyric release into public reckoning. In the personal grief of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin, he perceives a recurring American tragedy. Still fresh in memory are the deaths of Ahmaud Armery in Glynn County Georgia and of Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky. In his lyric cry, thirdly, Rivers voices the public grief about de facto, public executions of Daniel Prude in Rochester, New York and of George Floyd in Minneapolis. More than a strict need for law and order, such homicides represent Trumps existential threat to African Americans. Other African-American Studies Books 2010 – Dilemmas of Black Faculty at U.S. Predominantly White Institutions: Issues of the Post-Multicultural Era 2020 – The Cry of Black Rage in African American Literature from Frederick Douglass to Ta-Nehisi Coates 1989 – Race and Religion in Mid-Nineteenth Century America 1850-1877. Protestant Parochial Philanthropists Vol. 2





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